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Politics & Power Quote by Rocco Buttiglione

"That's possible, and in fact the legislation, the politics should graduate the advantages towards those who have children and give less to those who don't have children"

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A politician rarely says “have more kids” in plain terms; Buttiglione reaches for the safer instrument of the state: incentives. “Graduate the advantages” is bureaucratic velvet over a moral demand. It frames childrearing not as a private choice but as a civic contribution that should be rewarded, while childlessness becomes a kind of social deficit that deserves “less.” The real move is to turn reproduction into public policy without openly admitting the coercive edge.

The intent sits at the crossroads of demography, welfare design, and culture war. In aging European societies, low birthrates are treated like an economic emergency: fewer workers, stressed pensions, a shrinking tax base. Buttiglione’s language invites listeners to see parents as the nation’s unpaid infrastructure builders, making “advantages” feel like overdue compensation rather than preferential treatment. That’s the rhetorical trick: shifting the frame from equality to merit, where producing children reads as producing the future.

The subtext, though, is sharper. Once benefits are explicitly stratified by parental status, the state is no longer neutral about family forms. It pressures the undecided, stigmatizes the child-free, and quietly polices sexuality and gender roles by rewarding a traditional life script. Even the vagueness is strategic: “advantages” could mean tax breaks, housing priority, childcare, hiring preferences, or access to services - a flexible toolkit that can be sold as “pro-family” while still functioning as punishment-by-policy.

Buttiglione isn’t just proposing demographic triage; he’s asserting a hierarchy of citizenship where belonging is measured in descendants.

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TopicParenting
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Prioritizing Families in Legislation: Buttiglione's Viewpoint
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Rocco Buttiglione (born June 6, 1948) is a Politician from USA.

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